failed over ight follow u ur an police hooting...in the aftermath of the shooting, rookie officer...

13
1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 1/13 Failed Overight Follow uuran Police hooting Review find little evidence that uuran police department econd-gue their oicer who fire weapon under quetionale circumtance. Jared Rutecki and Cae Toner | Jan. 8, 2018

Upload: others

Post on 21-May-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 1/13

Failed Overight Follow uuran Police hootingReview find little evidence that uuran police department econd-gue their o�icer whofire weapon under quetionale circumtance.

 Jared Rutecki and Cae Toner  | Jan. 8, 2018

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 2/13

Thi tor i a joint project of the etter GovernmentAociation and WZ. 

Police in suburban Cook County who shoot people under questionable circumstances do so with impunity,according to a review of every suburban police shooting over 13 years.

A Better Government Association/WBEZ examination of 113 police shootings in suburban Cook since 2005 foundnone in which police brass or law enforcement counterparts thought discipline or criminal charges werewarranted against the officers involved.

At the same time, however, the investigation uncovered at least a half-dozen cases in which suburban officers sawcareers flourish after being involved in a controversial shooting.

In 2012, Cicero officer Don Garrity shot and killed a suspected gang member who Garrity said pointed a gun athis partner. In a lawsuit, which Cicero settled for $3.5 million, the gang member’s family claimed he wasunarmed and that police planted a gun near the body. Garrity was promoted from patrol officer to detective inthe months following the shooting.

In 2007, Dwayne Wheeler, then a Maywood police sergeant, shot and killed a suspect through the window of amoving car, an action law enforcement experts say is both ill-advised and dangerous. Wheeler is now the policechief in a small central Illinois town.

In 2009, Riverdale officer Anthony Milton opened fire on an unarmed 23-year-old as he sat in the driver’s seat ofa car outside his mother’s home. Reports suggest Milton, who approached the car because it was playing loudmusic, may have mistaken a screwdriver on the seat for a gun.

Milton was promoted to sergeant in February. Riverdale taxpayers wrote a check for $1.3 million to the family ofthe man Milton killed.

ver police hooting we tracked

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 3/13

croll over an interactive map to find all 113 policehooting and click for ummarie and pulicrecord in the GA/WZ dataae.

XPLOR TH DATA

Police experts point to a number of reasons few officers face scrutiny over such actions — the potential for costlycivil liability when police admit a mistake, the fraternal bond that inclines police to protect their own and ageneral reluctance to pass judgment on a fellow officer who acts in the heat of a moment.

“Unless it’s absolutely blatant or on video, they’re not going to upset the applecart,” said Gregory Kulis, a Chicagoattorney who represents many families in police violence cases. “There’s the belief that they don’t have theirofficers’ back.”

Police departments in the suburbs of Cook County say they rely on the Illinois State Police Public Integrity TaskForce to review police shootings. Illinois law requires a criminal investigation of police shootings be conducted byoutside agencies.

But the BGA and WBEZ found those mandated probes rarely lead anywhere because they are limited in scope.They are designed only to determine if an officer committed a crime, not if he or she made mistakes, showed badjudgment or violated principles of sound policing.

Experts agreed that criminal investigations by themselves are insufficient, likely bypassing critical scrutiny ofpoor conduct that may not rise to a violation of law. Could the officer have used less lethal options to defuse thesituation? Did he or she call for backup rather than charge into danger? Before firing, did the officer take notewhether any innocent bystanders were nearby?

“Obtaining a criminal conviction in a police shooting case is extremely difficult. It just doesn’t happen veryoften,” said Samuel Walker, a professor emeritus at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and an expert on policeaccountability. “But what does exist is a failure of police officers to follow policy.

“If they’re only looking at whether there is a basis for a criminal indictment, they’re not doing a completeinvestigation,” Walker said.

This much is certain. When a suspect is shot by police in suburban Cook County the officer who pulled the triggeris never charged, and police departments involved rarely conduct more than a cursory investigation into policyviolations if they look at all, the BGA/WBEZ investigation found.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 4/13

‘There he wa, ang!’Anthony Milton was on patrol in south suburban Riverdale on Aug. 20, 2009 when he heard loud music comingfrom a parked car around lunchtime in a residential neighborhood.

Milton pulled his squad car in front of the 1993 Buick Regal. When 23-year-old Brandon Harper started to getout of the car, Milton drew his weapon and ordered Harper to stay seated, according to police reports.

Also in the car were two teens Harper was planning to drive to high school registration, his family said.

‘There Should Be Accountability So 0:00 / 7:19d eLiten to WZ' egment on randon Harper. 

The only officer there, Milton ordered the three to raise their hands and place them on their faces as they sat inthe car, which was steps away from the front door of a house where Harper’s mother lived.

Milton later told state police investigators he then saw Harper drop his right arm and noticed a “silver object”between Harper’s hip and the seat. He opened fire and shot Harper once in the chest, killing him.

Police later recovered a digital scale, a small bag of crack cocaine spattered with Harper’s blood and a flatheadscrewdriver in the front passenger’s seat. There was no weapon on anyone in the car, records show.

Harper died later in the hospital, nine days before the birth of his daughter, Simorah.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 5/13

randon Harper Courte of famil

Suburban police shootings rarely gather much media attention, but the death of Harper was different. Itprompted protests, television news coverage and demands for accountability. Harper’s family sued Riverdale,settling the case for $1.3 million. Among the beneficiaries was the daughter Harper never met.

“I had her two days after his funeral,” said Taneka Burks, Simorah’s mother, who ran out to Harper’s car after hewas shot and had to be restrained by police. “It was good, and then it was still sad, because he had named herbefore she came but he just couldn’t get a chance to meet her.”

Milton, Riverdale police officials and Mayor Lawrence Jackson all declined to be interviewed.

State police found Milton had done nothing criminally wrong. The Cook County State’s Attorney’s office clearedhim — as it has every officer in every suburban police shooting reviewed for this report.

The BGA/WBEZ found no evidence Riverdale conducted any follow-up examination of Milton’s actions,including why he used deadly force in a situation prompted by a report of loud music. Police records also do notexplain why Milton failed to call for backup or why he opened fire on Harper with two minors so close.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 6/13

A roadide memorial mark the pot where randon Harper, 23, wa hot and killed  Riverdale police o�icer Anthon Milton on Aug. 20,2009. Jared Rutecki/GA

One of the teens in the car that day was 17-year-old Christopher West-Umbra, sitting in the front passenger seat.“I guess he had put one hand down off his face, I guess he was trying to reach his pocket or something, and thepolice officer just shot him,” he said.

Also in the car was West-Umbra’s younger brother, Marcus. “It happened so fast it really is not even a story. Wepulled up, he jumped out, there he was, bang! It just happened so fast," the younger brother said.

Milton was never disciplined or re-trained following the 2009 shooting, records show.

O�icer ‘detroed the crime cene’The BGA/WBEZ investigation also found two cases, one in Maywood and the other in Cicero, where families ofshooting victims claimed police dropped so-called “throw-down” guns near bodies to make it appear the victimshad been armed.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 7/13

Both incidents occurred in 2012 and police in both suburbs vigorously denied the allegations. No criminalcharges have been filed against officers in either case.

The Maywood shooting happened after police officers in that near west suburb rolled up on a group of menstanding outside an apartment building around 4:30 p.m. on Nov. 8, 2012. One of them, 20-year-old XavierMcCord, ducked into the building and ran up the stairs.

Xavier McCord Cook Count heri�' O�ice

Officer Michael Babicz, who later said in a deposition that McCord was doing nothing illegal when he first sawhim, gave chase and yelled at several bystanders in the staircase to get out.

According to police reports, McCord was on the third floor when Babicz ordered him to stop. Babicz told statepolice investigators he opened fire when McCord pivoted toward him and pulled a gun. The fatal wound hitMcCord in the chest.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 8/13

As McCord slumped to the floor, he dropped the gun, which tumbled down the staircase to a second-floorlanding, Babicz told investigators.

In the aftermath of the shooting, rookie officer Kyle Rice picked up the suspect’s gun and put it in the trunk of hissquad car, reports say. He later told investigators he picked up the gun to secure the scene. Rice later returnedthe chrome Cobra .380 caliber handgun to the stairway where he claimed it had originally landed, according topolice reports.

McCord’s family sued the Maywood police department, alleging McCord was unarmed when Babicz shot him andhad never owned the gun that Rice moved that day. The lawsuit claimed Rice’s actions were an attemptedcoverup of a bad shooting.

Rice, who declined to comment for this story, told state police investigators he moved the weapon “for safetyprecautions” after hearing “unknown persons downstairs” saying "their shoo-tin (sic).” Rice was since promotedto detective in Maywood.

‘I Think Someone Got Away With M 0:00 / 7:36d eLiten to WZ' egment on Xavier McCord. 

In a deposition connected to the McCord lawsuit, an Illinois State Police investigator said no fingerprints werefound on the gun and there were no concerns about moving the gun because the area “needed to be secured.”

But Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart, when told details of the case, said Rice appeared to have “destroyed the crimescene.”

“At a minimum, you have to train people and you have to sit there and explain to them that you can't do that withthe scene,” Dart said. “Say you were the most sincere, thoughtful person, you can’t do that.”

No administrative investigation was completed to determine whether Rice acted properly in moving the gun, orwhether his actions should have at least forced him to undergo additional training, according to police records.

“It seems like something should be done,” said Steve Hinton, an attorney who represented McCord’s family in itslawsuit. “There should be some internal investigation, some training, some classes.”

Erica Williams, McCord’s mother, said she has unanswered questions.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 9/13

“I still want to know today what reason they were bothering him,” Williams said. “What did he do?”

Maywood settled the lawsuit in January 2017 for $200,000.

Judge’ gun found at hootingThe Cicero case involved officer Don Garrity, who shot and killed Cesar Munive after he was seen fleeing a gangfight on a bicycle the night of July 5, 2012.

Garrity said while chasing Munive he saw the 22-year-old point a gun at another Cicero officer sitting in hissquad car. Garrity told police investigators he ordered Munive to drop his weapon but then fired when Muniverefused. Investigators found a .38 caliber weapon on the ground near the body.

A Cook Count Judge turned thi gun in to Chicago Police at a gun uack program in 2004. The gun mterioul turned up eight ear laternext to the od of Cear Munive, 22, who wa hot to death  a Cicero police o�icer Jul 5, 2012. Police record

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 10/13

Munive’s family sued the Town of Cicero, and as part of the case traced the gun to a Cook County judge, who saidhe had turned it over to Chicago police seven years earlier to be destroyed as part of a weapons buy-backprogram.

How that gun ended up by Munive’s body remains a mystery, but the details of its provenance came just weeksbefore Cicero agreed to a $3.5 million settlement in the family’s civil liability suit. Garrity’s lawyer, Craig Tobin,described his client as a hero and denied the gun was planted. He claimed Munive obtained it from another gangmember.

Within a year after the shooting, Garrity was promoted from patrol officer to detective. He is now off the forceand collecting a disability pension because of post-traumatic stress from the incident, according to Tobin.

Foxx: ‘Not in a poition to fix it.’In 2015, Illinois passed a law touted as a sweeping police reform that mandated independent oversight of policeshootings for all agencies, increased police training and required collection of data on every police shooting in thestate. The law set aside about $1 million each year intended for purchase of police body cameras.

Two years later, no body cameras have been purchased. Beyond an independent criminal review, the law requiresno deeper procedural analysis of shootings, a longstanding requirement in larger departments such as Chicago.

State Sen. Kwame Raoul, D-Chicago, one of the bill’s sponsors and a current candidate for Illinois AttorneyGeneral, said it was a response to a “strong call from the public to do something and to get some transparencyand accountability.” Sponsors, he said, had sought more provisions, including a requirement police be licensedby the state and that all officers be mandated to wear body cameras. The price tag prompted lawmakers toabandon the additional requirements, Raoul said.

State Rep. John Cabello, R-Machesney Park, a House sponsor of the bill who is also a Rockford police officer,remembered it differently. He said the final version was a “watered-down” compromise in which he worked tofend off the additional provisions sought by Raoul and others.

“It seems as though they were just trying to get anything passed to say ‘we did this,’” Cabello said of Raoul andothers who wanted more.

On average, it takes the state police about 17 months to complete a criminal investigation of suburban CookCounty police shootings.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 11/13

In Chicago — like many other departments in larger cities — police shootings are investigated from all angles.The Civilian Office of Police Accountability, or COPA, is specifically set up to independently look for potentialviolations of policies and procedures by Chicago officers.

COPA recently replaced a predecessor agency beset by charges of ineffectiveness and a record of excusingquestionable police shootings. When COPA investigates a shooting, basic information such as the date, location,and identities of the victim and police shooter are published on the agency’s website within weeks of a shooting.Later, when an investigation is completed, the findings are also posted online.

No such agency exists in the suburbs.

“If we could set up something like that, COPA for the suburban communities, it would be important,” said CookCounty Commissioner Richard Boykin, an Oak Park Democrat. “It provides another layer of protection for thecommunity for knowing accountability was in fact met.”

Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx would not discuss police procedures and policies, arguing that suchissues are outside her role as the county’s chief law enforcement executive.

“For me I am not in a position to fix it,” she said, when told of the BGA/WBEZ findings. “My role looking atcriminal charges is separate from that, administratively.”

Foxx was elected in 2016 promising to put greater emphasis on police accountability. “I can understand whymillions of people who live outside the city of Chicago want to be able to make sure their departments areoperating at their highest levels of professionalism and integrity,” she said.

That said, Foxx added, “I am not a policy maker in that space because that is not a space that I inhabit.”

Neither Foxx, nor her predecessor, Anita Alvarez, have filed criminal charges in any suburban Cook Countypolice shooting, records show. In Foxx’s time in office, nine investigations of suburban police shootings haveclosed. Two others were still under investigation.

Richard Devine, the former Cook County State’s Attorney who helped oversee the formation of the state policePublic Integrity Task Force, said police chiefs at smaller departments should never rely totally on a criminalinvestigation to decide whether officers acted appropriately.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 12/13

“The investigation of whether criminal charges should be brought is dealing with a burden of proof that is at thehighest,” Devine said. “If I were a police chief, I would not take the criminal investigation as the be-all and end-allof whether I would pursue disciplinary action against a person. In Chicago, it’s not uncommon at all, even if thereare no criminal charges, to have some kind of discipline imposed.”

The BGA/WBEZ review found suburbs could rarely produce evidence of administrative investigations, let aloneon the level of a COPA probe. In these examples, as well as the more limited ones conducted by otherdepartments, officers were not disciplined or given training recommendations.

Take the case of Dwayne Wheeler, a former Maywood sergeant who fatally shot a 35-year-old drug suspect in thehead in 2007 following an undercover sting in which a police informant bought $20 in cocaine and heroin.

As police converged on Fred Henderson’s car in a gas station parking lot that September night after the deal,police said he tried to drive away, striking a van and a squad car. Wheeler opened fire into the moving car, hittingHenderson in the left side of his head, and then ran away from the careening Lexus.

“We weren’t out there to hurt nobody, okay?” Wheeler said in a recent interview. “We were out there to rid thedrugs off the streets of Maywood. We have done this hundreds of times without any incident.”

The village of Maywood agreed to pay Henderson’s family a $500,000 civil liability settlement. Wheeler’sdecades-long police career has been dotted with problems.

In the months prior to the shooting, Wheeler was suspended for three days after engaging in a 100-mph chaseover a traffic infraction in 2004. Two years after the shooting, he was fired from Maywood for not living withinvillage limits.

Follow our workGet hard-hitting GA invetigation traight toour inox ever week.

IGN UP

He was detained for “suspicion of DUI” in Missouri the following year, and resigned from a police job in the KaneCounty community of Sleepy Hollow in July 2012, records show. That came days after a police officer in St.Charles, also in Kane County, discovered Wheeler asleep behind the wheel of a parked car. The records show hewas suspected of intoxication with his hand laying on a .45 caliber handgun loaded with eight rounds of hollowpoint ammunition in the front passenger seat.

1/8/2018 Failed Oversight Follows Suburban Police Shootings

https://projects.bettergov.org/taking-cover/little-oversight.html 13/13

The officer who found Wheeler took his gun, and another officer gave Wheeler a ride home, letting him gowithout charges, records show.

“Pure and simple, this doesn’t rise to our expectations of how this case should be handled,” said St. CharlesDeputy Police Chief David Kintz, who is now a chief at a community college. “There is no standing rule that justbecause he’s an officer he gets treated differently. Everyone who reads this will come to the same conclusion. Theanswer is he should have been arrested.”

Wheeler later got a job at the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office as an investigator. He now works as apolice chief in Kincaid, a small town outside of Springfield, earning $47,000 a year.

“The thing is you make bad decisions in life, and I have, and I admit to it,” Wheeler said. “To me, it’s notcorruption. I made a bad decision, alcohol was involved, and I moved on in my life from that.”

WBEZ criminal justice reporter Patrick Smith contributed to this report.